Even $3-a-gallon gas probably won’t be enough to get more motorists on the road for Thanksgiving this year. Auto club AAA is forecasting that Thanksgiving travel will decline slightly from a year ago, with 43.4 million Americans expected to take a trip of 50 miles or more away from home. That’s 1.5 percent shy of last Thanksgiving, when travel hit its highest level since the recession.

AAA projects 721,000 Coloradans, or 14.1 percent of the population, will journey 50 miles or more from home during the holiday weekend, a decrease of 0.8 percent from last year.

Air travel is expected to drop 3.7 percent, while the number of people driving is expected to fall 1.6 percent, AAA said. The decline comes despite the fact AAA says gas is selling for less than $3 a gallon in “the vast majority of states.”

The nation's largest grocery chain is trying to leap into the driverless delivery market, announcing Tuesday that it is now ready to bring milk, eggs and apples to some customers' homes in a vehicle with nobody at the wheel.

Uncertainty may be flooding the health care market after a Texas judge’s ruling on the Affordable Care Act, but in Colorado there is some good news: there's another sign pointing to the individual market stabilizing.